Gender questions in informal sector of West Bengal: a case study

Authors

  • Sayati Ghosh Research Scholar, Centre for Knowledge Ideas and Development Studies, Kolkata, West Bengal, India

Keywords:

relative autonomy index, putting out, comparative advantage, entrepreneurship, restriction, hypotheses

Abstract

The study wishes to focus on the various questions of gender in the informal sectors of West Bengal. I chose Pingla Naya village of Paschim Medinipur for its eminent scroll painters. Scroll painting is a female-dominated art-form. I conduct a field study and form a questionnaire that attempts to answer the questions related to autonomy and entrepreneurship of women to find whether autonomy is encompassing. The relative autonomy index of women is satisfyingly high. Surprisingly, the women with such a high relative autonomy index have very low willingness for entrepreneurship. Though women were initially self-employed, male entrepreneurs are coming into the limelight after this informal art form got recognized as a micro scale industry in 2016.

References

Carka M, Mano R. Self-Determination Factors and Their Impact Through the Relative Autonomy Index on Skills-Based Learning, 2021. (https://doi.org/10.36941/jesr-2021-0084).

Level and Consumption Pattern of Household Consumption Expenditure of National Sample Survey Organization, 2009-2010, round 66.

Mies M, Lalitha K, Kumari K. Indian Women in Subsistence and Agricultural Labour, World Employment Programme Research, 1984.

August. Measuring Women’s Goal Setting and Decision Making; Measures of Advancing Gender Equality, World Bank reports, 2021. (https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/gender/brief/measures-for-advancing-gender-equality-magnet).

Vaz A, Pratley P, Alkire S. Measuring women's autonomy in Chad using the relative autonomy index. Feminist economics. 2016;22(1):264-294. https://emerge.ucsd.edu/r_3eeqalct8lgckbr/.

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Published

2023-04-17

How to Cite

[1]
S. Ghosh, “Gender questions in informal sector of West Bengal: a case study”, J. Soc. Rev. Dev., vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 09–13, Apr. 2023.

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Articles